1. Prediction of Quality of life by Self-Efficacy, Pain Intensity and Pain Duration in Patient with Pain Disorders
- Author
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Saeid Yazdi-Ravandi, Taslimi, Z., Jamshidian, N., Saberi, H., Shams, J., and Haghparast, A.
- Subjects
Self-Efficacy ,Quality of Life ,Pain Intensity ,Chronic Pain ,Research Papers ,Pain Duration ,lcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,humanities ,lcsh:RC321-571 - Abstract
The quality of life (QOL) has been defined as ‘‘a person’s sense of well-being that stems from satisfaction or dissatisfaction with the areas of life that are important to him/her’’. It is generally accepted that pain intensity and duration have a negative impact on the QOL. One specific type of control is “self-efficacy”, or the belief that one has the ability to successfully engage in specific actions. The ability to adapt to pain may play an important role in maintaining the QOL. In this study, we investigated the role of self-efficacy, pain intensity, and pain duration in various domains of quality of life such as physical, psychological, social and environmental domains. In this study, 290 adult patients (146 men, 144 women) completed coping self-efficacy and the WHOQOL-BREF Questionnaire. Moreover, we illustrated numerical rating scale for pain intensity. The results were analyzed using SPSS version of 19.0 and means, descriptive correlation, and regression were calculated. Our data revealed that self-efficacy but not the pain duration could significantly anticipate the QOL and its four related domains (P
- Published
- 2013